Authorities have reported early success in the 100-day piracy
campaign started this month, with Beijing police alone confiscating
7,000 pirated discs.
Ten disc shops in the capital city were closed as they were
caught selling over 100 film, music and software discs that
violated copyright.
This is the first time that the Beijing municipal government has
revoked sales permit of shops selling pirated products, the Beijing
Daily reported.
Owners of the stores were barred from participating in the
promotion, production, import, wholesale and retail of discs in the
coming 10 years, the paper reported.
Meanwhile, shops that sold less than 100 pirated discs had the
discs and illegal incomes confiscated.
They were also fined up to 50,000 yuan (US$6,200) according to
the law.
Over 140 audio-visual publishing houses in Beijing vowed that
they would never publish any products that violated copyright, the
paper reported.
More than 10 major computer markets in Zhongguancun, China's
"silicon valley," promised that they would strengthen supervision
over legitimacy of the software in the computers they sold.
In Taiyuan in North China's Shanxi Province, 40,000 pirated
discs were caught in a raid on a night market on Tuesday.
The Chinese Government has offered a reward of 300,000 yuan
(US$37,000) to those who successfully report illegal production
lines.
In the past, pirated products mainly consisted of computer
software, movies, soap operas and bestsellers.
But now, documentaries, teaching materials, dictionaries and
even Party education books have been pirated as well.
China International Television Corporation was one of the
victims.
"I was really upset when hearing that all of the documentaries
we produced were pirated," said Ma Runsheng, manager of the
corporation.
(China Daily July 29, 2006)